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#1
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Russian vine
Could anyone tell me where I could get hold of a Russian vine? I'm
told they cover fences superbly. many thanks in advance |
#2
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Russian vine
Renee wrote:
Could anyone tell me where I could get hold of a Russian vine? I'm told they cover fences superbly. many thanks in advance By the bottom of the stem and pull hard to uproot it! They cover fences, gates, sheds houses and entire villages in one growing season. Really best avoided. |
#3
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Russian vine
In article , Derek Turner writes: | Renee wrote: | Could anyone tell me where I could get hold of a Russian vine? I'm | told they cover fences superbly. | | many thanks in advance | | By the bottom of the stem and pull hard to uproot it! | | They cover fences, gates, sheds houses and entire villages in one | growing season. Really best avoided. Yes. The George Bush of the horticultural world - aggressive and boring. Why not describe the requirement more precisely? This group can recommend much more interesting things that cover fences nearly as fast. You should provide the size of the fence (length and height), aspect (facing south or whatever), roughly the type of soil, whether you object to the cover taking over the rest of your garden, and whether you would like flowers, fruit, birds or what. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#4
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Russian vine
On 4/4/07 14:04, in article ,
"Derek Turner" wrote: Renee wrote: Could anyone tell me where I could get hold of a Russian vine? I'm told they cover fences superbly. many thanks in advance By the bottom of the stem and pull hard to uproot it! They cover fences, gates, sheds houses and entire villages in one growing season. Really best avoided. As is Renee, who has been trolling in uk.food. You have been warned. -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon http://www.discoverdartmoor.co.uk/ (remove weeds from address) |
#5
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Quote:
Do you have a very, very, very big fence? Do you require it to be utterly smothered, probably along with any other plant or building in the same vague area, up to the size of, say, an aircraft hanger? Are you happy doing a lot of cutting back from time to time and removing very large volumes of off-cuts? Are you happy planting something called "Fallopia baldschuanica" in Latin, and colloquially known as "mile-a-minute"? Are you happy that the BBC advice on it is "It grows far too big, too fast and too ugly even for a large garden"? But I expect you will discover it is, sadly, for sale almost anywhere they sell plants, along with other horrors like Leyland cypress. You can find lots of other nice and more controllable plants to cover normal size fences like jasmines and honeysuckles and clematis and chocolate vine, and some of them are evergreen. |
#6
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Russian vine
On Apr 4, 2:20 pm, (Nick Maclaren) wrote:
Why not describe the requirement more precisely? This group can recommend much more interesting things that cover fences nearly as fast. You should provide the size of the fence (length and height), aspect (facing south or whatever), roughly the type of soil, whether you object to the cover taking over the rest of your garden, and whether you would like flowers, fruit, birds or what. I understand it's called polygonum aubertii. I've seen it on fences while travelling through Teesdale and did once stop the car to ask a householder there where she got hers, but she said she'd inherited it. It looked lovely and I'd like some for my fence. It's south-facing, roughly five foot high and twenty-five foot long. If you think it will be invasive, then maybe you could suggest something similar i.e. that totally covers the fence and produces flowers of some kind. The Russian vine I saw produced tiny white flowers and looked quite stunning when in full bloom. many thanks, Renee |
#7
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Russian vine
I understand it's called polygonum aubertii. I've seen it on fences
while travelling through Teesdale and did once stop the car to ask a householder there where she got hers, but she said she'd inherited it. It looked lovely and I'd like some for my fence. It's south-facing, roughly five foot high and twenty-five foot long. If you think it will be invasive, then maybe you could suggest something similar i.e. that totally covers the fence and produces flowers of some kind. The Russian vine I saw produced tiny white flowers and looked quite stunning when in full bloom. many thanks, Renee I once grew one along a fence. By the second year it had completely taken over the fence and was scrambling up onto an out house roof. The problem was it needed trimming every one or two weeks in Summer - it put out shoot around a foot long each week! I've never known a plant grow so fast. We've since sold the house. I'd be curious to see if the vine is still there or if it has completely taken over the entire terrace row. Norman Digger. |
#8
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Russian vine
Norman Digger wrote: I once grew one along a fence. By the second year it had completely taken over the fence and was scrambling up onto an out house roof. The problem was it needed trimming every one or two weeks in Summer - it put out shoot around a foot long each week! I've never known a plant grow so fast. We've since sold the house. I'd be curious to see if the vine is still there or if it has completely taken over the entire terrace row. Thanks for this, Norman. If you or anyone else has ideas for alternatives, I'd appreciate it. I don't want to have to be cutting it back every week. |
#9
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Russian vine
In article . com, "Renee" writes: | | Thanks for this, Norman. If you or anyone else has ideas for | alternatives, I'd appreciate it. I don't want to have to be cutting it | back every week. As I said, post your requirements and constraints. I could suggest a dozen such plants, but all are unsuitable for many conditions. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#10
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Russian vine
On Apr 5, 10:34 am, (Nick Maclaren) wrote:
In article . com,"Renee" writes: | | Thanks for this, Norman. If you or anyone else has ideas for | alternatives, I'd appreciate it. I don't want to have to be cutting it | back every week. As I said, post your requirements and constraints. I could suggest a dozen such plants, but all are unsuitable for many conditions. I posted them earlier, Nick. I'm looking for something that will cover a fence that is roughly 25 foot long by 5 foot high. I want something with small flowers, easy to maintain, and which will also mask the fence, which is quite unsightly. I'm not sure about the soil, but the fence is south-facing. There used to be blackberry bushes there, but we had them all uprooted years ago. (Although shoots sometimes still appear through the lawn!) |
#11
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Russian vine
Provided the fence is strong enough to support a climber, and provided there
is something for a climber to hang on to such as trellis, then a Clematis Montana may suit your requirements. I've seem some trained as hedges along fences this way and they can look quite spectacular. Not as rampant as Russian vine. Norman Digger |
#12
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Russian vine
On 5 Apr, 12:05, "Renee" wrote:
I posted them earlier, Nick. I'm looking for something that will cover a fence that is roughly 25 foot long by 5 foot high. I want something with small flowers, easy to maintain, and which will also mask the fence, which is quite unsightly. I'm not sure about the soil, but the fence is south-facing. There used to be blackberry bushes there, but we had them all uprooted years ago. (Although shoots sometimes still appear through the lawn!) I admire your patience ... Are you close to the russian vine you've seen? Because now would be ideal to take a few cuttings and simply plunge them in some compost and they'll root easily. I've propagated all our vines in this way, sometimes putting a cutting directly in situ at the edge of the wall. I've done Akebia in this way (but mine is not in flowers, yet). I'd suggest also for your fence a jasmin, if you want flowers. Again, you'll need to maintain it as with every climbers I'm afraid. Some grow slower than others, some do flowers then do berries and then a superbe foliage in autumn, like the cotoneaster. You could also have a variegated ivy, no maintenance there at all beside perhaps cutting in the spring huge clumps of them coming forward from your fence (but these usually bears the flowers so it's up to you). I use a lots around my house and it's great for the birds. Also it's evergreen. HTH |
#13
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Russian vine
In article .com, "Renee" writes: | | I posted them earlier, Nick. I'm looking for something that will cover | a fence that is roughly 25 foot long by 5 foot high. I want something | with small flowers, easy to maintain, and which will also mask the | fence, which is quite unsightly. I'm not sure about the soil, but the | fence is south-facing. There used to be blackberry bushes there, but | we had them all uprooted years ago. (Although shoots sometimes still | appear through the lawn!) Consider any of the more vigorous, small-flowered clematis or lonicera (including the natives C. vitalba and L. periclymenum). The various hydrangea relatives and (primarily for foliage) Parthenocissus are also appropriate. In warmer areas there are lots of other things, too. Most need something to cling onto, but the hydrangea relatives and Parthenocissus don't. There are also ivies by the dozen, which don't, either. Clematis armandii is excellent if the fence is strong enough and it can have a few wires tacked into it. It is the best of the evergreen climbers for such a purpose (in most of the UK, that is), and is spectacular in spring. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#14
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Russian vine
* Renee wrote, On 05/04/2007 12:05:
I posted them earlier, Nick. I'm looking for something that will cover a fence that is roughly 25 foot long by 5 foot high. I want something with small flowers, easy to maintain, and which will also mask the fence, which is quite unsightly. I'm not sure about the soil, but the fence is south-facing. There used to be blackberry bushes there, but we had them all uprooted years ago. (Although shoots sometimes still appear through the lawn!) I'd go for a number of smaller climbers, so that you can have interest at different times of the year. On a similar length of fence in my garden, I've got honeysuckle, a couple of roses, jasmine, japonica and a couple of different clematis. -- Cheers, Serena My mind not only wanders, it sometime leaves completely. |
#15
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Russian vine
On 5 Apr, 14:25, Serena Blanchflower
wrote: I'd go for a number of smaller climbers, so that you can have interest at different times of the year. On a similar length of fence in my garden, I've got honeysuckle, a couple of roses, jasmine, japonica and a couple of different clematis. What's a 'Japonica'? |
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